Mexico 8 Escudos 1713 "1715 Fleet Shipwreck" PCGS 64
Full Date Mexico 1713 M Xo J Eight Escudos "From the 1715 Fleet Shipwreck" PCGS 64! Struck on a very large planchet.
Obverse: Crowned Bourbon arms in the simplified one year type of 1713. The shield of Granada and the sinister castles of Castile has disappeared. The devices of Sicily and Naples and other features are very crudely engraved. One palette in the arms of Aragon, three straight bendlets for the Low Countries. Flanking the Bourbon arms are the denomination (VIII) to the right and mint mark (MXo) and the assayer's initial (J) to the left. J is for Jose Eustaquio de Leon, who became an assayer at Mexico City in 1705. In the legend above the mint mark we have the date, 1713, in four full digits.
Reverse: A large tressure surrounds a cross fleury. Four highly stylized fleurs-de-lis in the angles of the cross.
For reasons not yet fully understood, quality control went to Hell at the Mexico City mint in 1713, resulting in some of the worst hand-engraved dies and most mis-shapen planchets in the history of that mint. This full date, well struck onza is as choice as it gets, short of a royal, for 1713. It is struck on the largest gold cob planchet I have ever measured, nearly 36mm.
A spectacular and unimprovable Fleet coin for this date. Two sub-types of the 1713 onza are known. This is the rarer and better engraved variety, believe it or not, featuring a large normally positioned mint mark (MXo). The Florida State Collection has one attractive example of the high mint mark variety (FL coin #11.01254, pictured in Craig), but no choice example of this variety. Schulman's legendary "Spanish Galleon Treasures" sale in November 1972 had one attractive example of this variety at lot 288.
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Obverse: Crowned Bourbon arms in the simplified one year type of 1713. The shield of Granada and the sinister castles of Castile has disappeared. The devices of Sicily and Naples and other features are very crudely engraved. One palette in the arms of Aragon, three straight bendlets for the Low Countries. Flanking the Bourbon arms are the denomination (VIII) to the right and mint mark (MXo) and the assayer's initial (J) to the left. J is for Jose Eustaquio de Leon, who became an assayer at Mexico City in 1705. In the legend above the mint mark we have the date, 1713, in four full digits.
Reverse: A large tressure surrounds a cross fleury. Four highly stylized fleurs-de-lis in the angles of the cross.
For reasons not yet fully understood, quality control went to Hell at the Mexico City mint in 1713, resulting in some of the worst hand-engraved dies and most mis-shapen planchets in the history of that mint. This full date, well struck onza is as choice as it gets, short of a royal, for 1713. It is struck on the largest gold cob planchet I have ever measured, nearly 36mm.
A spectacular and unimprovable Fleet coin for this date. Two sub-types of the 1713 onza are known. This is the rarer and better engraved variety, believe it or not, featuring a large normally positioned mint mark (MXo). The Florida State Collection has one attractive example of the high mint mark variety (FL coin #11.01254, pictured in Craig), but no choice example of this variety. Schulman's legendary "Spanish Galleon Treasures" sale in November 1972 had one attractive example of this variety at lot 288.
'Click Here to read more about '1715 Plate Fleet Shipwreck'